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observations at comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko

Herbert Gunell, Charlotte Goetz, Elias Odelstad, Arnaud Beth, Maria Hamrin, Pierre Henri, Fredrik O.L. Johansson, Hans Nilsson, Gabriella

Stenberg Wieser

To cite this version:

Herbert Gunell, Charlotte Goetz, Elias Odelstad, Arnaud Beth, Maria Hamrin, et al.. Ion acoustic

waves near a comet nucleus: Rosetta observations at comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko. Annales

Geophysicae, European Geosciences Union, 2021, 39 (1), pp.53-68. �10.5194/angeo-39-53-2021�. �insu-

03121197�

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https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-39-53-2021

© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Ion acoustic waves near a comet nucleus: Rosetta observations at comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko

Herbert Gunell1, Charlotte Goetz2, Elias Odelstad3, Arnaud Beth1, Maria Hamrin1, Pierre Henri4,5, Fredrik L. Johansson6, Hans Nilsson7, and Gabriella Stenberg Wieser7

1Department of Physics, Umeå University, 90187 Umeå, Sweden

2Space Research and Technology Centre, European Space Agency, Keplerlaan 1, 2201AZ Noordwijk, the Netherlands

3Department of Space and Plasma Physics, Royal Institute of Technology, 10044 Stockholm, Sweden

4LPC2E, CNRS, 45071 Orléans, France

5Lagrange, OCA, CNRS, UCA, Nice, France

6Swedish Institute of Space Physics, Box 537, 75121 Uppsala, Sweden

7Swedish Institute of Space Physics, Box 812, 98128 Kiruna, Sweden Correspondence:Herbert Gunell ([email protected]) Received: 7 August 2020 – Discussion started: 18 August 2020 Accepted: 25 November 2020 – Published: 15 January 2021

Abstract. Ion acoustic waves were observed between 15 and 30 km from the centre of comet 67P/Churyumov–

Gerasimenko by the Rosetta spacecraft during its close flyby on 28 March 2015. There are two electron populations: one cold at kBTe≈0.2 eV and one warm atkBTe≈2 eV. The ions are dominated by a cold (a few hundredths of electron- volt) distribution of water group ions with a bulk speed of (3–3.7) km s−1. A warmkBTe≈6 eV ion population, which also is present, has no influence on the ion acoustic waves due to its low density of only 0.25 % of the plasma den- sity. Near closest approach the propagation direction was within 50from the direction of the bulk velocity. The waves, which in the plasma frame appear below the ion plasma fre- quency fpi≈2 kHz, are Doppler-shifted to the spacecraft frame where they cover a frequency range up to approxi- mately 4 kHz. The waves are detected in a region of space where the magnetic field is piled up and draped around the inner part of the ionised coma. Estimates of the current as- sociated with the magnetic field gradient as observed by Rosetta are used as input to calculations of dispersion re- lations for current-driven ion acoustic waves, using kinetic theory. Agreement between theory and observations is ob- tained for electron and ion distributions with the properties described above. The wave power decreases over cometo- centric distances from 24 to 30 km. The main difference be- tween the plasma at closest approach and in the region where

the waves are decaying is the absence of a significant current in the latter. Wave observations and theory combined sup- plement the particle measurements that are difficult at low energies and complicated by spacecraft charging.

1 Introduction

Observations of waves can give us information of the plasma in which they are generated and through which they have propagated. Waves are also of general interest in plasma physics as they provide a means for energy trans- fer and because they affect the charged particle distributions through wave–particle interaction processes. When comets 21P/Giacobini–Zinner and 1P/Halley were visited by space- craft in the 1980s, a variety of plasma waves were reported (Scarf et al., 1986a, c; Scarf, 1989). Among these obser- vations were ion acoustic waves, detected both in the bow shock region (Scarf et al., 1986b) and upstream (Oya et al., 1986).

The Rosetta spacecraft (Glassmeier et al., 2007a) ac- companied comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko for 2 years from August 2014 to September 2016. Shortly after the spacecraft reached the comet, low-frequency (f.100 mHz), long-wavelength (100 km.λ.700 km) waves were detected in the magnetic field data (Richter et al., 2015, 2016). These

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were named “singing comet” waves; they have been inter- preted in terms of a modified ion-Weibel instability (Meier et al., 2016), found to be compressional (Breuillard et al., 2019) and detected as far as 800 km from the nucleus (Goetz et al., 2020). Waves in the lower hybrid frequency range (f.15 Hz) were found by André et al. (2017) and Karls- son et al. (2017). Lower hybrid waves were frequently seen in bursts in connection with density gradients, oscillating on minute timescales (Stenberg Wieser et al., 2017). These minute timescale oscillations are known as steepened waves and were observed outside the diamagnetic cavity (Goetz et al., 2016a, b). Electric field measurements showed waves in the lower hybrid frequency range on both sides of the dia- magnetic cavity boundary, indicating a mode conversion be- tween lower hybrid waves and ion acoustic waves (Madsen et al., 2018).

Ion acoustic waves are compressional plasma waves that are weakly damped only whenTeTi, whereTeandTiare the electron and ion temperatures respectively, and the fre- quency is below the ion plasma frequency. In this limit, the angular frequency ωis proportional to the wave numberk and the phase speed is cs=√

kBTe/mi, wherekBis Boltz- mann’s constant and mi is the ion mass (see, for example, Krall and Trivelpiece, 1973). As the frequency approaches the ion plasma frequency, they become increasingly heav- ily damped, and also the phase speed decreases. If the ion and electron temperatures are similar, this also leads to heavy damping, and ion acoustic waves are usually not detectable in that regime. Charged particle distributions become unstable when one population drifts at a large enough speed relative to another population, and this results in the growth of waves.

In particular, this applies to the current-driven ion acoustic instability, where the electron and ion populations are in rel- ative motion. The current-driven ion acoustic instability has been studied in laboratory experiments (Sato et al., 1976;

Kawai et al., 1978; Michelsen et al., 1979), and Stringer (1964) mapped out the unstable parameter regimes theoret- ically. At comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko, ion acous- tic waves were observed by the Rosetta spacecraft on 20 January 2015 (Gunell et al., 2017b) at approximately 2.5 au from the Sun, before the diamagnetic cavity had formed (see Goetz et al., 2016a, for a discussion of diamagnetic cavity formation), and also in the diamagnetic cavity near perihe- lion (Gunell et al., 2017a). The ion acoustic waves seen in the cavity were interpreted as a result of part of the current at the diamagnetic cavity boundary closing through bulges on that boundary and generating waves through a current- driven instability (Gunell et al., 2017a). Ion acoustic waves can be identified by measuring either the variations in plasma density or in the electric field. At comet 67P/Churyumov–

Gerasimenko, Gunell et al. (2017b) detected the waves in electric field oscillations and Gunell et al. (2017a) in den- sity variations. In this work, the detection relies on density variations.

Figure 1.Trajectory followed by the Rosetta spacecraft during the close flyby on 28 March 2015. The red circle represents the nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko.

In this article, we examine ion acoustic waves detected by Rosetta during its close flyby of comet 67P on 28 March 2015. The comet was at a heliocentric distance of 2.0 au at the time, and the gas production rate varied between 3×1026 and 9×1026s−1during the day. Magnetic pileup and drap- ing have been studied before for this flyby, both in observa- tional studies and using hybrid simulations (Koenders et al., 2016). The magnetic field piled up near the nucleus, caus- ing the solar wind protons to be deflected out of the ecliptic plane. This in turn caused the draped magnetic field in the region near the nucleus to align itself with the deflected solar wind flow. No sign of a diamagnetic cavity was seen dur- ing the flyby, and that was likely due to it not having formed yet (Goetz et al., 2016a). The hybrid simulations of the flyby presented by Koenders et al. (2016) show the presence of an infant bow shock (Gunell et al., 2018) approximately 100 km from the nucleus, but that is farther out than the spacecraft reached on that day. Thus, the spacecraft was situated in the inner coma, where the plasma was of cometary origin. The plasma parameters, although not exactly the same, were in a range similar to that of the diamagnetic cavity observations near perihelion. The magnetic field environment was domi- nated by magnetic pileup and draping during the flyby, while the diamagnetic cavity has its own peculiar magnetic field environment, with a sharp discontinuity at the boundary.

2 Observations

We use the comet-centred solar equatorial coordinate system (CSEQ) throughout this article. In this system, the x axis points from the comet to the Sun, thezaxis is the compo- nent of the rotation axis of the Sun that is perpendicular to thex axis, and they axis is directed to complete the right- handed coordinate system (original definition in the SPICE kernel; Acton, 1996). The spacecraft moved from negative to positivey andzvalues at a nearly constantx=11 km. The spacecraft trajectory is illustrated in Fig. 1.

The closest approach occurred at 13:05 UTC, and then Rosetta was at a cometocentric distance of 15 km. The space-

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craft moved slowly (with a relative speed to the comet below 1 m s−1) and was in the the vicinity of the nucleus for several hours as shown in Figs. 1 and 2h.

2.1 Instrumentation

The data used in this article were obtained by instruments belonging to the Rosetta Plasma Consortium (RPC) (Carr et al., 2007). For the wave observations (Sect. 2.2) we used the Rosetta Langmuir probe instrument (RPC-LAP) (Eriks- son et al., 2007) to record time series of probe current vari- ations attributed to waves in the cometary plasma environ- ment. RPC-LAP is constituted of two spherical probes, 5 cm in diameter, that are mounted on booms protruding from the spacecraft. Starting at 10:55:34 (all times are given in UTC) on 28 March 2015, RPC-LAP regularly recorded such time series for the rest of the day. The probe current was sampled at a frequency of fs=18 750 Hz, and each time series con- tains 1600 samples, corresponding to a time series length of 85.3 ms. This process was repeated every 160 s. Each of the two probes obtained 295 such time series during the day. The power spectral density for each time series is computed, us- ing Welch’s method (Welch, 1967), averaging segments that are 256 samples long with an overlap of 65 % (Fig. 2a and b).

The probes were held at fixed potentials with respect to the spacecraft: probe 1 at+30 V and probe 2 at−30 V. For refer- ence, the spacecraft potential was approximately−20 V with respect to the plasma. The Langmuir probe instrument was also used to derive the bulk speed of the ions and the electron temperature by sweeping the probe potential and measuring the probe current as described in Sect. 2.3.

We use the Mutual Impedance Probe (RPC-MIP) (Trotignon et al., 2007) to obtain the plasma density during the flyby. The RPC-MIP instrument observes the plasma fre- quency, from which the plasma density is derived (Fig. 2f).

The ion populations are sampled by the Ion Composition Analyser (RPC-ICA) (Nilsson et al., 2007) (Fig. 2g). The magnetic field is measured by the magnetometer (RPC- MAG) (Glassmeier et al., 2007b). The magnetic field com- ponents are presented in CSEQ coordinates in Fig. 2d. How the properties of the plasma are derived from the data col- lected by these instruments is described in Sect. 2.3.

2.2 Waves

Power spectral densities obtained for RPC-LAP probe 1 are shown in Fig. 2a, and those recorded by probe 2 are shown in Fig. 2b. The colour-coded quantity is the logarithm of the power spectral density (PSD) of the probe currents. The low- est frequency bins are at risk of picking up low-frequency noise, and we therefore show the spectrum for frequencies above 200 Hz. There may be other waves present at low fre- quencies, but in this article we only consider ion acoustic waves above 200 Hz. The waves are identified as ion acous- tic waves because they are compressional, showing a plasma

density variation, and other wave modes can be excluded for the spatial and temporal scales where they are observed as shown in Sect. 2.4.

A high-amplitude wave signal is seen during the close flyby, and it falls off as the spacecraft moves away from the nucleus. The power spectral density of the positively bi- ased probe 1 is several orders of magnitude higher than that of the negative probe 2. This means that the probe 1 signal is dominated by the electron current and that the signal is proportional to the density variation of the wave. The probe operated in this regime also in the previously published ob- servations of waves in the diamagnetic cavity (Gunell et al., 2017a), whereas in the first published observations (Gunell et al., 2017b), the probe was capacitively coupled to the plasma. A simple test to distinguish between the two regimes is to measure the wave amplitude as a function of probe bias, where a negatively biased probe suppresses the electron cur- rent (Torvén et al., 1995). In the present case, we compare the two probes that are biased differently (see also Gunell et al., 2017b). Also the maximum PSD value is similar to those observations, and the plasma density, shown here in Fig. 2f, was in both cases somewhat above 1000 cm−3. The situation differs from the first ion acoustic wave observations at comet 67P (Gunell et al., 2017b) when the plasma den- sity was an order of magnitude smaller and the waves cou- pled capacitively to the probe through the displacement cur- rent instead of a particle current. The difference between the probes is also seen in Fig. 2c, which shows the integral of the power spectral density over frequencies from 200 Hz up to the Nyquist frequency.

Figure 3 shows four sample spectra of the probe 1 cur- rent for frequencies from 200 Hz up to the Nyquist frequency.

There is wave power starting at the low end of this frequency range, with a broad maximum in the vicinity of 1 kHz, and at higher frequencies the PSD declines toward the noise floor.

The black curve shows the PSD at 13:24:54, which is near closest approach to the comet nucleus at a cometocentric dis- tance of 15 km. As seen in Fig. 2c, the total wave power fluctuated but remained at a generally high level while the spacecraft was in the near-nucleus environment. The PSD obtained at 15:16:54 (red curve in Fig. 3) is another exam- ple from this period. The spacecraft was at 17.5 km cometo- centric distance, and the wave power was even higher than that shown by the black curve. The wave power declined as the spacecraft moved to larger cometocentric distances. This process started approximately at 17:45 when Rosetta was at 24 km from the centre of the nucleus. Two examples from the declining phase are shown in Fig. 3: the spectrum ob- tained at 17:56:54 at 25 km (blue curve) and one spectrum from 19:08:54 at 29 km (green curve) when the wave power had fallen even more. The two curves that will be used for comparison with wave theory in Sect. 3 are the black curve (13:24:54) for closest approach and the blue curve (17:56:54) for the outbound case. The peaks at multiples of 1 kHz seen

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Figure 2.Rosetta observations during the close flyby of comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko on 28 March 2015.(a)Power spectral density of RPC-LAP probe 1 in the frequency range 200 Hz< f <4.5 kHz.(b)Power spectral density of RPC-LAP probe 2 in the same frequency range.(c)The power spectral density of probes 1 and 2 integrated from 200 Hz to the Nyquist frequency of 9375 Hz. RPC-LAP probe 1 was biased to+30 V, and probe 2 was biased to−30 V with respect to the spacecraft potential.(d)Bx (blue),By (green), andBz (red) components of the magnetic flux density measured by RPC-MAG.(e)The magnitude of the magnetic flux density.(f)The plasma density derived from RPC-MIP data.(g)Ion energy spectrum observed by RPC-ICA summed over all angles and mass channels.(h)Cometocentric distance of the Rosetta spacecraft.

in the frequency range where the wave power is low, both in Figs. 3 and 2, are artefacts generated by the spacecraft.

2.3 Plasma properties

To analyse the waves we need to know the basic properties of the plasma. The plasma density obtained by the mutual impedance probe, RPC-MIP, is shown in Fig. 2f. The den- sity peaks around closest approach and then falls off as the

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Figure 3.Power spectral densities from 200 Hz up to the Nyquist frequency for the RPC-LAP probe 1 current for four different times during the Rosetta close flyby of comet 67P. The black curve (13:24:54) is used in Sect. 3 for analysis of waves near closest ap- proach and the blue curve (17:56:54) for similar analysis of during the outbound part of the flyby.

spacecraft moves away from the nucleus. The scattered in- stantaneous plasma density values are a signature of strong plasma inhomogeneities of approximately 10 % around clos- est approach. For the calculations in Sect. 3 we estimate a plasma density of ne=1600 cm−3 at closest approach and ne=1000 cm−3for the outbound case.

Figure 2g shows an energy spectrum of the positive ions observed by RPC-ICA. At E/q≈20 V is a warm (kBTi≈ 6 eV around the time of closest approach) water ion popula- tion, which has been accelerated toward the spacecraft due to the negative spacecraft potential. The temperature was ob- tained by fitting a drifting Maxwellian to the data recorded by the instrument. Some accelerated water ions are seen at higher energies, but the vast majority of the ions seen in Fig. 2g belong to the warm, low-energy population. Fitting the observed flux to a drifting Maxwellian distribution, we arrive at a density estimate of about 4 cm−3for this ion popu- lation. However, this is far below the 1600 cm−3plasma den- sity measured by RPC-MIP. The sensitivity of RPC-ICA is low in the lowest energy range, and the angular range that allows entry into the instrument is narrow. A mono-energetic low-energy beam is liable to be undetected. Thus, the dis- crepancy between the RPC-ICA measured ion density and the plasma density measured by RPC-MIP is explained by a cold water ion distribution that is invisible to RPC-ICA.

This is confirmed by Langmuir probe characteristics shown in Fig. 4.

Figure 4b shows the part of the characteristics dominated by the ion current. In the following we estimate the bulk speed of the cold ions. The warm ion population is negli- gible because of its low density, and cold plasma theory is applicable because the thermal speed of the cold ions is far below their bulk speed. For a cold ion population drifting at a bulk speedu, the probe currentI depends on the probe to plasma potentialV according to

I= −π rp2niue

1− 2 eV miu2

, (1)

whererp=2.5 cm is the radius of the probe,mithe ion mass, andnithe ion density (Mott-Smith and Langmuir, 1926). We fit a line to the linear part of the curve, and taking the deriva- tive of Eq. (1) and rearranging it, we can determine the drift velocity from the slope dI /dV of that line:

u=2nie2π rp2 midI

dV

. (2)

Taking the ion density to be equal to the plasma density mea- sured by RPC-MIP, we arrive at an ion drift speed of 3 km s−1 near closest approach and 3.7 km s−1at 17:52:06 when the spacecraft was moving outward as shown in Fig. 4b. These numbers are within the range of those observed by Odelstad et al. (2018) in spite of the differences in the magnetic field environment and distance to the nucleus. The ion temperature can be estimated from the neutral temperature, as ions are created by ionisation of the neutrals. Biver et al. (2019) found neutral temperatures in the 50–200 K range, which corre- sponds to approximately 0.02 eV, and that is well below the 1 eV kinetic energy, corresponding to the 3–3.7 km s−1drift speeds obtained above. This confirms the assumptions stated above Eq. (1) and ensures the applicability of the equation.

Photo emission comes in as an offset in the ion current, be- low the plasma potential, and, as such, does not play a role in the slope of the ion current. Furthermore, for the first of the sweeps, the probe was in shadow behind the spacecraft. The deviation from the linear fit at the low voltage end of Fig. 4b could be caused by secondary emission provoked by impact- ing ions, but the quantum yield is low for low energies, and our analysis of the ion current only starts at−10 V. For the wave analysis, the probe is positively biased, rendering ion impact, and hence also secondary emission, negligible.

Figure 4d shows the part of the probe characteristic where the current is dominated by the electrons. The dashed lines have been fitted to the high probe potential part of the sweep.

Here, the current varies linearly with voltage (Swift and Schwar, 1970), and the cold electron temperature is (Engel- hardt et al., 2018)

Te=8πrp4e3n2e me

dI dV

−2

. (3)

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Figure 4.I–V traces from RPC-LAP near closest approach (black) and during the outbound part of the flyby (blue).(a)CompleteI–V traces.(b)Ion current part of the characteristics and lines fitted to the ion currents in order to find the bulk speed of the cold ion popula- tion.(c)Electron currents and exponentials fitted to determine the warm electron temperature.(d)Electron saturation current part of the characteristics and lines fitted to determine the temperature of the cold electron population.

The slopes of these lines correspond to temperatures of kBTe=0.2 eV for both the closest approach and outbound curves. The curves also show that the plasma potential is approximately 20 V above the spacecraft potential. It was shown in simulations by Johansson et al. (2020) that the spacecraft potential is driven negative by positively biased el- ements on the solar panels that collect cold electrons from the plasma. The estimate we use in Sect. 3 is that the electron dis- tribution is constituted by two contributions with equal den- sities: one cold with temperatures as estimated in Fig. 4d and one warm with a temperature of 2 eV. The latter is found by fitting exponential curves to the part of theI–V trace dom- inated by the warm electrons as shown in Fig. 4c. These re- sults are similar to previous Langmuir probe sweep interpre- tations from when the comet was near perihelion (Eriksson et al., 2017; Gunell et al., 2017a; Odelstad et al., 2018) with the difference that the cold electrons are not quite as cold here as the 0.1 eV that was estimated near perihelion. These two electron temperature values are within the range of those ob- served by RPC-MIP at similar heliocentric distances in 2016 (Wattieaux et al., 2020). The general instrumental response of the RPC-MIP mutual impedance probe in a plasma char- acterised by two electron populations with different temper- atures is described by Gilet et al. (2017) and Wattieaux et al.

(2020).

Figure 2d shows the components and Fig. 2e the mag- nitude ofB as measured by RPC-MAG. The magnitude of

Figure 5.Magnetic field magnitude during a period around closest approach. The red lines are fitted to the data in order to derive the current densitiesJ=4.9 µA m−2 (inbound) andJ=1.9 µA m−2 (outbound).

the magnetic field increased as the spacecraft approached the centre of the comet and decreased as it was moving away.

This is expected from magnetic pileup and field line draping, but there are also other changes in the magnetic field that can be seen in Fig. 2d and e.

To estimate the current associated with the non-uniformity of the magnetic field, we fit lines to the magnitude of the magnetic field as shown in Fig. 5.

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Assuming that the spacecraft moves through a stationary magnetic field, we estimate the magnitude of the current den- sity by

J = |1B|

µ0|1r|. (4)

where|1B| is the change in the fitted magnetic field mag- nitude, and |1r| is the distance the spacecraft moved dur- ing the same period of time. This yields a current density of J =4.9 µA m−2 when the spacecraft was approaching the nucleus andJ =1.9 µA m−2while it was moving away.

These values should be seen as estimates of the average cur- rent density. Koenders et al. (2016) compared the magnetic field observed during this flyby to the magnetic field ob- tained in hybrid simulations and found good agreement for By, which is the dominating component. The simulatedBz

component was about a factor of 2 lower than what was ob- served by Rosetta. The difference could be attributed to the limited resolution or the use of an averaged outgassing profile in the simulations (Koenders et al., 2016). For the magnitude ofBthe difference only amounts to 10 %–20 %, but the sim- ulation does not follow how the plasma quantities develop in time. Figure 5 shows that the magnetic field changed on much shorter timescales than those of our linear approxima- tions during the flyby. From a single spacecraft measurement we cannot determine whether these magnetic field fluctua- tions are due to local variations of the current in the plasma or whether the whole inner region of the ionised coma is under- going oscillations. Thus, the current density may have been both higher and lower than these average values during the flyby.

2.4 Typical scales

A plasma density of 1600 cm−3corresponds to an electron plasma frequency of approximately 350 kHz and a H2O+ion plasma frequency of 2 kHz. Thus, electron timescale waves, such as Langmuir waves and electron acoustic waves, are far beyond reach of our observations, the Langmuir probe be- ing sampled at the much lower frequency of 18.75 kHz. Ion acoustic waves, on the other hand, are in the accessible fre- quency range. The magnetic field during the flyby varied be- tween 20 and 40 nT approximately. This corresponds to elec- tron cyclotron frequencies between 0.6 and 1.1 kHz, which is in the middle of the observed frequency range. However, the observed wave frequency does not follow the changes in the magnetic field, which rules out electron cyclotron waves. For example, the PSD peaks at 700 Hz for both times 13:24:54 and 15:16:54, shown by the black and red curves in Fig. 3, respectively, even though the electron cyclotron frequency was 1.1 kHz at 13:24:54 and 0.57 kHz at 15:16:54. The ion cyclotron frequency is (0.02–0.03) Hz, which is below the frequencies we can resolve.

The spacecraft was at 15 km cometocentric distance at closest approach and at 25 km at 18:00 when the wave am-

plitude started to decrease. Thus, the typical length for the variation in wave amplitude is about 10 km. Assuming a typ- icalB of 30 nT, warm ions at 6 eV would have a gyroradius of 50 km. Cold ions are picked up by the electric field, mov- ing along trajectories with a radius of curvature that is even larger. The ions can thus be seen as unmagnetised. Warm electrons at 4 eV have a gyroradius of 225 m, and for cold 0.2 eV electrons the gyroradius is 50 m approximately.

In Sect. 3 we use kinetic theory to compute dispersion re- lations for electrostatic waves in an unmagnetised plasma.

This is applicable if the wavelength is much shorter than the gyroradii of the electrons and ions so that the influence of magnetic forces on particle motion is negligible on wave- length scales. In Sect. 3 it is seen that the phase speed for ion acoustic waves is approximately 1.7 km s−1. Thus, a wave at 200 Hz (the lower limit of the spectrum shown in Fig. 2a) has a wavelength of 8.5 m, which is far below all the gyroradii reported above. The assumption that the plasma is unmagne- tised for wave purposes holds above that limit, and these are the waves considered here. For waves at the very lowest fre- quencies, below the range considered here, the wavelength is longer, and electromagnetic effects would have to be taken into account.

2.5 Measurement uncertainties

All measurements are associated with uncertainties. The ran- dom error of the RPC-MIP-derived densities is in the range of 10 %–20 %. The error is computed from the frequency resolution of the instrument, which measures the plasma fre- quency line of the mutual impedance spectra. For RPC-MAG the uncertainty in individual measurements is 5 nT (Goetz et al., 2016a). This is less than the natural variations that are seen on the magnetic field curves in Fig. 2. The cold ion pop- ulation is not detected by RPC-ICA. Ions with energies above a few electronvolt are detected, and their energy is known to the precision of the width of the energy bins, which is 30 % at energies below 30 eV. The direction from which the low-energy ions arrive at the instrument depends heavily on the electric fields around the spacecraft, and it requires mod- elling to relate the observed arrival directions to the travel directions of ions outside the spacecraft sphere of influence (Bergman et al., 2020a, b). For the very lowest energies the sensitivity is low, and also ions can enter the instrument only from a narrow angular range. For RPC-LAP the uncertainty lies more in the interpretation than in the measurement of currents and voltages. We will now discuss the uncertainties in those interpretations that we have made, using data from all instruments.

The spacecraft potential is determined from the Lang- muir probe characteristics, and that estimate could be off by

∼2 eV. This does not affect the slopes of the characteristics that are used to determine the electron cold and warm tem- peratures as well as the ion drift speed. The temperature of the cold electrons is calculated using Eq. (3). The most sig-

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nificant contribution to error in Eq. (3) is the electron density, which is squared in the equation. We used the density deter- mined by RPC-MIP, which has an error of 10 %–20 %. The total error in Eq. (3) is estimated to be.50 %. The estimate of the warm electron temperature could be influenced by other electron populations. However, the exponential fit ends 2 V below the plasma potential, and the cold electrons have little influence there, given their low 0.2 eV temperature. The probe was in the shadow behind the spacecraft during closest approach, which means that there was no influence from pho- toelectrons. The measurement performed while the space- craft was outbound could in principle have been influenced by photoelectrons, even though no substantial change in tem- perature was observed. The possible error is estimated to be covered by the 1–4 eV range spanned by the test distributions in Sect. 3. The ion velocity is found by the use of Eq. (2).

The velocity is proportional to the density, which is obtained by RPC-MIP, which means that the 10 %–20 % random error in those measurements applies to the velocity as well. Any influence of a spacecraft sheath on the RPC-LAP measure- ments is negligible, since the probe is outside the sheath. The Debye length in a plasma with a 2 eV electron temperature and a 1.6×109m−3density isλDe=26 cm, which is much less than the boom length of 2.24 m. This value of λDe is an upper limit, since it is based on the warm electrons. If the cold electrons would also be included, lower values would be obtained, which would place the probe even farther outside the sheath. Deviations from the nominal value due to density and temperature fluctuations are estimated at less than a fac- tor of 2, and the probe would remain outside the sheath also under such conditions.

The estimate of the warm ion temperature from the RPC- ICA observations is subject to an uncertainty of the order of the spacecraft potential uncertainty∼2 eV. The cold ion temperature cannot be measured directly, but it can be con- fined to below∼1 eV, since if the temperature were higher, the high-energy tails would be visible in the energy range that can be observed. The wave observations constrain the cold ion temperature further as is seen in the growth rate cal- culations with different temperature in Sect. 3.

The current density estimate is influenced by the error in the magnetic field measurements and the error in the space- craft position. The latter can be neglected as it is of the or- der of tens of metres, and the spacecraft moved|1r| =2 and 5 km during inbound and outbound measurement periods, re- spectively, as shown in Fig. 5. An upper limit of the error of the current density estimate of 40 % is obtained if the full 5 nT random error of the individual estimate is applied to

|1B|in Eq. (4).

3 Dispersion relations

Because of the uncertainty at which both electron and ion distribution functions are known, we have calculated disper-

sion relations under several different assumptions about these distributions. We then compare the results of the calculations with the wave observations in order both to arrive at an expla- nation for how the waves are generated and to put constraints on what we can say about the electron and ion distributions.

The total distribution function is composed of a cold and a warm electron and a cold and a warm ion distribution. The parameters are shown in Table 1 for nine test cases used to model the distribution near closest approach and two cases for the outbound trajectory.

We use the simple pole expansion method to compute the dispersion relations (Löfgren and Gunell, 1997; Gunell and Skiff, 2001, 2002; Tjulin et al., 2000; Tjulin and André, 2002). In a comet context it was reviewed by Gunell et al.

(2017b, also providing the computer code for the computa- tions). Each component of the distribution function is mod- elled by an approximate Maxwellian,

Mm(v)=

"

1+(v−vD)2

2vt2 +. . .+ 1 m!

(v−vD)2 2vt2

!m#1

, (5) wherev is velocity,vt is the thermal speed, vD is the drift speed, andmis the number of terms included in the expan- sion. The procedure used to calculate dispersion relations is briefly described in Appendix A. The expression inside the brackets of Eq. (5) is the reciprocal of a Taylor expansion of exp

(v−vD)2/ 2v2t

.

Asmtends to infinity,Mm(v)approaches a Maxwellian, and for small values of m the distributions have suprathermal tails. In the distributions in Table 1,m=3 for the ions and m=5 for the electrons. The influence of suprathermal tails is evaluated in Appendix B.

Figure 6 shows dispersion relations for the nine test cases that correspond to the observations near closest approach.

We are assuming a real wave numberkand a complex an- gular frequencyω. Panel (a) shows the real part ofω, and panel (b) shows the damping rateγ. Negative values of γ correspond to wave growth. Panel (c) shows the shaded rect- angle in panel (b) in more detail. Several of the curves are so similar they fall on top of each other and are difficult to dis- tinguish in the figure. In all cases the least damped or fastest growing mode is the ion acoustic mode and that is the one shown.

The density of the warm ion population is varied in distri- butions 1–3. In distribution 1 the warm ion density is 4 cm−3 as estimated in Sect. 2.3. In distribution 2 the warm ion den- sity is assumed to be zero, and in distribution 3 the warm ion density is 10 times higher than the estimate in Sect. 2.3.

The real part of the dispersion relation is indistinguishable among the three cases, as seen in Fig. 6a. The damping rates in Fig. 6c are very close in the three cases, although it can be seen that distribution 3, with the highest warm ion density, has a slightly smaller growth rate than the other two. How- ever, the difference is small, and we conclude that the warm

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Table 1.Parameters of the distributions used in the examples related to the plasma at closest approach. In the table,nmeans density,kBis Boltzmann’s constant,T denotes temperature, andvDrepresents drift speed.

Cold ions Warm ions Cold electrons Warm electrons

Distr. n kBT vD n kBT vD n kBT vD n kBT vD

(cm−3) (eV) (km s−1) (cm−3) (eV) (km s−1) (cm−3) (eV) (km s−1) (cm−3) (eV) (km s−1) Closest approach

1 1554 0.02 0 4 6 0 779 0.2 39.3 779 2 0

2 1558 0.02 0 0 – – 779 0.2 39.3 779 2 0

3 1518 0.02 0 40 6 0 779 0.2 39.3 779 2 0

4 1558 0.02 0 0 – – 779 0.2 0 779 2 39.3

5 1558 0.02 0 0 – – 779 0.2 39.3 779 1 0

6 1558 0.01 0 0 – – 779 0.2 39.3 779 2 0

7 1558 0.04 0 0 – – 779 0.2 39.3 779 2 0

8 1558 0.02 0 0 – – 779 0.2 39.3 779 4 0

9 1558 0.02 0 0 – – 779 0.2 19.6 779 2 19.6

Outbound

A 1006 0.02 0 0 – – 503 0.2 23.6 503 2 0

B 1006 0.02 0 0 – – 503 0.2 0 503 2 0

ion population only has a negligible influence on the waves.

Therefore, the warm ion density is set to zero in the rest of the distribution functions.

We have used the current density estimate, J= 4.9 µA m−2, obtained in Sect. 2.3 for the inbound part of the flyby. The dispersion relations are computed in the rest frame of the ions, and the current is modelled by assigning a drift velocity,|vD| = |J /(en)| =39.3 km s−1, to one of the elec- tron populations. Here,ndenotes the density of the electron population in question. In distribution 2 and distribution 4 that drift speed is given to the cold and warm electron distri- bution, respectively. For distribution 4 the ion acoustic mode is damped, while it is growing for distribution 2. We con- clude that to drive the ion acoustic waves unstable, the cur- rent cannot be carried by the warm electrons alone. In distri- bution 9 the current is carried by both electron populations, which each are given a drift velocity of|vD| =19.6 km s−1. This yields a lower growth rate than for distribution 2, but the mode is still unstable for a range ofkvalues.

In distribution 5, the temperature of the warm electrons has been decreased to 1 eV. This leads to a decreased growth rate compared to distribution 2, which has 2 eV warm elec- trons but otherwise is equal to distribution 5. In distribution 8 the electron temperature has been increased to 4 eV with all other parameters the same as in distributions 2 and 5. The growth rate for distribution 8 is higher than that for the other two distributions. However, in all three cases the waves are unstable over a similar wavelength range.

Distributions 6 and 7 have 0.01 and 0.04 eV cold ions, re- spectively; that is to say, in distribution 6 the ions are colder and in distribution 7 warmer than they are in the otherwise equal distribution 2. This affects the growth rate so that dis- tributions with colder ions grow faster and over a wider k

range than distributions where the ions are warmer (Fig. 6c).

Also the real part ofωis affected, as shown in Fig. 6a, but this is significant only forkvalues larger than thekwhich corre- sponds to maximum growth. The influence of suprathermal ions on the dispersion relations and growth rates is evaluated in Appendix B, and it is found to be similar to the difference between distribution with 0.01 and 0.02 eV ions. The distri- bution function of the cold ions cannot be measured directly, and hence effects caused by the shape of the distribution can- not be distinguished from effects caused by the temperature alone. However, we may conclude from all nine cases that any process that gives the ions higher or the electrons lower energy will lead to decreased growth or increased damping.

Dispersion relations for distributions A and B, detailed in Table 1, are shown in Fig. 7. These distributions correspond to the plasma parameters obtained during the outbound pas- sage of the spacecraft and close to when the PSD represented by the blue line in Fig. 3 was recorded at 17:56:54. In distri- bution A the cold electrons have been given a drift velocity corresponding to the current densityJ =1.9 µA m−2 mea- sured when the spacecraft was moving away, and the dis- persion relation corresponding to distribution A is very sim- ilar to that at closest approach. In distribution B none of the populations have been assigned a drift velocity. This leads to a stable distribution, and the waves are weakly damped in- stead of growing. Examining the magnetic field in Fig. 2 we see no large-scale change near 18:00. That the field remains constant, except for small fluctuations, while the spacecraft moves, means that there is no large-scale magnetic field gra- dient in this region and hence no large-scale current either.

Thus, the change in the plasma that affects the waves is the absence of a current, and this indicates that the reason why the wave spectrum fades out as the spacecraft moves away

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Figure 6.Dispersion relations at closest approach for the nine as- sumed distributions specified in Table 1.(a)Real part of the dis- persion relation. (b)Damping rateγ.(c)Close-up of the shaded rectangle in(b). The numbers next to the curves identify the dif- ferent distribution functions shown in Table 1. Positive values ofγ correspond to wave damping and negative values to wave growth.

from the nucleus is the decline of the current density. Around 18:00 the waves likely were propagating to the spacecraft from a source region closer to the nucleus, where the current density was still high enough to generate waves.

4 Doppler shift

The dispersion relations are computed in the ion frame of reference and the observations are, by necessity, performed in a spacecraft-fixed frame. A frequency fmin the moving medium is Doppler-shifted to frequencyfscin the spacecraft frame according to

fsc=vph(fm)+ucos(α)

vph(fm) fm, (6)

wherevphis the phase speed given by the dispersion relation, u is the speed of the moving medium, andα is the angle between the wave direction of propagation and the velocity u.

Figure 8a shows the H2O+ion plasma frequency and the frequency of maximum growth, Doppler-shifted to the space-

Figure 7.Dispersion relations while the spacecraft was outward- bound based on assumed distributions specified in Table 1.(a)Real part of the dispersion relation.(b) Damping rateγ. Positive val- ues ofγ correspond to wave damping and negative values to wave growth.

craft frame according to Eq. (6) for the dispersion relations that correspond to distributions 2, 7, and 9 and withu de- termined by Eq. (2). The frequencies are shown as functions of the angleα. The angle is not known from observations, but by comparing the Doppler-shifted frequencies to the ob- served spectrum, we can assess what values ofαwould lead to an interpretation in which observations and theory are con- sistent. This is explained in what follows.

The dispersion relations show that the damping is consid- erable at the ion plasma frequency. This has also been seen in experiments with current-driven ion acoustic waves, where the power declines with frequency and reaches the noise floor at frequencies well below the ion plasma frequency (Kawai et al., 1978). For our near closest approach sample spectrum shown by the black curve in Fig. 3 this happens at approxi- mately 5 kHz. The range of anglesαconsistent with the ob- served spectra can then be constrained to those for which the ion plasma frequency is mapped to frequencies above 5 kHz.

If the waves follow the dispersion relation corresponding to distributions 2 or 9 (solid red curve in Fig. 8a), this means thatα.56and in the case of distribution 7 (solid black curve in Fig. 8a) the angle is restricted toα.49. We will round this off toα.50.

For a particular dispersion relation to be in agreement with observations, there should be significant wave power at the Doppler-shifted frequency of maximum growth. In this re- gard, distribution 7 is in better agreement with observations than distribution 2 because the spectrum has fallen signifi- cantly at 2 kHz, and the dashed red curve in Fig. 8a is above

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Figure 8.Doppler-shifted H2O+ion plasma frequencies,fpi, and frequencies of maximum growth,fmg,(a)at closest approach and (b) during the outbound motion of the spacecraft. The dispersion relations used to compute the Doppler shift correspond to distribu- tions 2, 7, 9, and A in Table 1.

2 kHz for most of the relevant angle range of α.50deter- mined above. The dashed black curve is close to 1 kHz in this range, and it is in good agreement with the peak of the spec- trum in Fig. 3. The dashed blue curve corresponding to the frequency of maximum growth for distribution 9, in which cold and warm electrons both carry current in equal mea- sure, falls between the other two. Of the different dispersion relations we have examined, it is the one corresponding to distribution 7 that best fits the Rosetta data. However, sev- eral distributions can lead to similar growth rates at similar frequencies, and we cannot constrain the distribution func- tion closely. What we can say is that distributions that lead to moderate growth rates are in better agreement with the data than those that show very rapid growth.

For the outbound part of the spacecraft trajectory, Fig. 8b shows the Doppler-shifted ion plasma frequency and fre- quency of maximum growth for distribution A. The real part of the dispersion relation for distributions A and B overlaps in Fig. 7, and therefore the Doppler-shifted ion plasma fre- quency will be the same for distribution B as for distribution A. For distribution B the waves are damped everywhere, and there is no frequency of maximum growth. We have already concluded in Sect. 3 that distribution B is more likely than distribution A and that the waves that were observed as the

spacecraft moved away were not generated at the spacecraft location. The frequency at which the wave power peaks tells us more about the source region than about the conditions at the spacecraft position. The blue curve in Fig. 3 has fallen to the noise floor at approximately 3 kHz, and from the solid curve in Fig. 8b the dispersion relation is seen to be in agree- ment with data for angles in the rangeα.70.

5 Discussion and conclusions

We have analysed data obtained during Rosetta’s close flyby of comet 67P on 28 March 2015. The multiple instruments used were RPC-LAP, RPC-ICA, RPC-MAG, and RPC-MIP, all part of the Rosetta Plasma Consortium. Waves which we interpret as current-driven ion acoustic waves were recorded by the Langmuir probe instrument RPC-LAP as probe cur- rent variations. These waves were seen all the time the space- craft was close to the nucleus, and the wave power started to decrease at approximately 24 km cometocentric distance.

We estimated the current density from magnetic field mea- surements and found that the same currents that are involved in draping and pileup of the magnetic field (Koenders et al., 2016) are sufficient to drive the ion acoustic mode unstable, according to the kinetic model we have used to compute dis- persion relations. Koenders et al. (2016) could observe field line draping until the rapid magnetic field change that oc- curred at 20:42 when Rosetta was at 34 km cometocentric distance.

Data from RPC-LAP indicate the presence of two elec- tron populations, one cold at temperature around 0.2 eV and one warm at∼2 eV. Furthermore, the RPC-LAP characteris- tics show the presence of a cold ion population drifting with a speed between 3 and 3.7 km s−1. Theoretical estimates of acceleration by a radial ambipolar electric field lead to ion bulk speeds in this range (Vigren and Eriksson, 2017) in agreement with observations (Odelstad et al., 2018). The cold component of the ion distribution went undetected by the ion spectrometer RPC-ICA. Instead, a warm, several electron- volts in temperature ion distribution was detected by RPC- ICA, but its density is not sufficient for it to have any signif- icant influence on the waves.

We are not able to measure the fine details of the elec- tron and ion distributions. However, by testing different as- sumptions about the distributions it is possible to say some- thing about it. We have seen that the best agreement be- tween the theoretical dispersion relations and the observed wave spectra is obtained when the growth rate is moder- ate. This can be achieved with a cold ion distribution with kBT =0.04 eV. This is the warmest cold distribution that we tried, but it is still a very low temperature compared to all the other charged particle populations. The same result may be obtained with a lower temperature, if there also are suprathermal ions present. To accurately measure distribu- tion functions at such low energies would represent a chal-

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lenge in space-based instrumentation. These cold ion tem- peratures are reasonable, considering that Biver et al. (2019) found neutral temperatures up to approximately 0.02 eV be- tween the nucleus and 15 km cometocentric distance. The ion distribution is formed by ionisation of the neutrals, and initially the neutral and ion temperatures are the same. On their way out to the spacecraft position, the ions may un- dergo some heating, either through an increased bulk temper- ature or by forming suprathermal tails. The rapidly decreased growth with increasing cold ion temperature from 0.01 via 0.02 to 0.04 eV also shows that the cold ion temperature is of this order (a few hundredths of electronvolt). For a warmer cold ion population, the distribution would be stable and no waves generated, and as seen in Sect. 4, if the cold ion pop- ulation is 0.01 eV or colder, the higher growth rate leads to a worse agreement with observations. The growth rate is also influenced by what fraction of the current is carried by the cold electrons. This, in turn, depends on the relative speed of the two electron populations and how the electron density is distributed between them. To summarise the result of com- puting dispersion relations for the different distributions we have tried, it is distribution 7 in Table 1 that shows the best agreement with observations. It has the warmest cold ion dis- tribution (0.04 eV), the current carried by the cold electrons, and no warm ion component as that was found to be negligi- ble.

By computing the Doppler shift and comparing observed spectra with wave theory and known properties of current- driven ion acoustic waves, we can estimate the angle between the bulk velocity of the cold ions and the propagation di- rection of the waves to beα.50for closest approach and α.70farther out when Rosetta was moving away and the wave power decreasing. Previous estimates have shown that ions move away from the centre of the comet, predominantly in a radial direction (Odelstad et al., 2018), as would be ex- pected if they are accelerated by the ambipolar field present in the inner coma (Gunell et al., 2019). There are also ob- servations of ions with an anti-sunward velocity component (Berˇciˇc et al., 2018), but those ions were faster than the (3–

3.7) km s−1 we have observed here. If we assume that the ions move radially outward, the estimate of α.50 for the waves near closest approach will also apply to the angle be- tween the direction of propagation and the radial direction.

Waves should propagate in the direction of the relative ve- locity between the electrons and the ions, and our angle es- timates must not be seen as general results. They apply only at the position of the spacecraft during the flyby and for the orientation of the current at the time. During the outbound pass of the spacecraft, the angle of propagation cannot be re- stricted more than to say that it is below 70. Here, Rosetta was likely outside the source region, and the waves propa- gated to the spacecraft from a source located closer to the nucleus.

The use of wave observations in combination with wave theory complements the other measurements, particularly the cold ion population that is inaccessible to the particle instru- ments. It also lets us confirm the interpretation of probe data concerning the electron populations and the interpretation of the observed variation of the magnetic field as a spatial gra- dient. Yet we only have information about the waves along a single spacecraft trajectory, and what we know about the cur- rent comes from crude estimates based on single spacecraft magnetic field observations. Obtaining a more complete pic- ture of currents and waves in the inner coma would require the comet to be accompanied by multiple spacecraft collect- ing data at the same time (Götz et al., 2019).

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Appendix A: Dispersion relations

In order to compute dispersion relations, the distributions de- scribed by Eq. (5) are written as a sum:

f (v)=X

j

aj

v−bj

, (A1)

where bj are the poles of the distribution function and aj are the residues at those poles. The dielectric function for a plasma containing different species, α, is (e.g. Krall and Trivelpiece, 1973)

(k, ω)=1+X

α

ω2 k2

Z kdfα(u)/du

ω−ku du. (A2)

We normalise each population fα and in Eq. (A2) it is weighted with its plasma frequency squared,ω2. When in- tegrating in the complex plane, the integral path is closed in the upper half plane, and(k, ω)is expressed as (Gunell and Skiff, 2002)

(k, ω)=1−2π iX

α

ω2 X

bj,α∈U

aj,α

(ω−kbj,α)2, (A3) where U denotes the upper half-plane. We assume a real value for k and seek a complexω by solving the equation for the dispersion relation, which is

(k, ω)=0. (A4)

This equation is solved numerically by seeking solutions that minimise |(k, ω)|2. For more information about the method the reader is referred to the original articles (Löf- gren and Gunell, 1997; Gunell and Skiff, 2001, 2002; Tjulin et al., 2000; Tjulin and André, 2002) and to the short review in a comet context by Gunell et al. (2017b).

Appendix B: The influence of suprathermal ions

As mentioned in the main text the indexmcontrols the thick- ness of the suprathermal tails of the distribution function. In distributions 1–9,m=3 for the ions andm=5 for the elec- trons. For comparison we have performed calculations with m=6 andm=8 for all populations.

These are shown in Fig. B1 as distributions 10 and 11 by the red and blue curve respectively. In both cases the cold ion temperature was 0.02 eV, and for comparison the disper- sion relation for distribution 6, which has 0.01 eV cold ions, is also shown in Fig. B1. The results are very similar, and we conclude that the influence on the dispersion relation from the suprathermal tails is similar to the difference between distributions with 0.01 and 0.02 eV ions. Since we cannot directly measure the distribution function at these low ener- gies, we cannot tell the two effects apart. The distributions with highermindices shown in Fig. B1 and those in Fig. 6 both agree with observations within the limits of experimen- tal uncertainty.

Figure B1. Dispersion relations for distributions with different suprathermal tails. Distribution 6 is the same as the distribution with that number shown in Fig. 6, and it hasm=3 for the ions andm=5 for each of the two electron populations. Distribution 10 hasm=6 and distribution 11m=8 for all three populations.(a)Real part of the dispersion relation.(b)Damping rateγ.(c)Close-up of the shaded rectangle in(b). Positive values ofγ correspond to wave damping and negative values to wave growth.

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Code and data availability. The Rosetta data sets are available in the ESA Planetary Science Archive at https://archives.esac.esa.int/

psa (last access: 21 December 2020, European Space Agency, 2020). The specific data set used in this article is available at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3973232 (last access: 25 Novem- ber 2020), together with computer codes to produce the figures (Gunell et al., 2020).

Author contributions. HG performed the analysis in collaboration with CG, who was also the one to identify the flyby as an item of interest for wave studies, and EO, who in particular contributed to the plasma characterisation based on Langmuir probe data. All authors contributed to the writing of the final paper.

Competing interests. The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.

Acknowledgements. We thank the entire Rosetta Team for their ef- forts in operations, archiving, and mission support.

Financial support. This research has been supported by the Swedish National Space Agency (grant nos. 96/15 and 108/18).

Charlotte Goetz was supported by a European Space Agency (ESA) Research Fellowship. Work at LPC2E/CNRS was supported by Centre National d’Etudes Spatiales (CNES) and by ANR (grant no.

ANR-15-CE31-0009-01).

Review statement. This paper was edited by Peter Wurz and re- viewed by Martin Volwerk and one anonymous referee.

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